Many of the impediments to starting a new business have been removed over the last 20 years.

You no longer have to hire an accountant to register the business, hunt around for premises, hire a bookkeeper, find an advertising agency, build a product prototype, spend days designing the letterhead, understanding the regulations and weaving your way through them, and doing the hundreds of other tasks necessary to start a business.

They can all be done with digital tools from your kitchen table, or outsourced to someone who has the specific expertise necessary, from their kitchen table.

What used to take time, money and most importantly the energy of budding entrepreneurs can no longer be used as an excuse for not moving forward.

The wheat has been sifted from the chaff by the digital winds.

That just leaves the toughest challenge, the one that in most cases motivated the thinking in the first place, the one that separates the dreamers from the ‘doers’.

How do you identify and generate traction with those prepared to part with their money to buy your product or service?

When they have bought from you once, how do you keep them coming back, or better still, turning your product into a subscription service?

This always was the hardest part of the entrepreneurial journey.

It always will be.

However, these days there are far less excuses not to have a go than there were 20 years ago.